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Posted: 2016-02-19T19:25:57Z | Updated: 2016-02-19T19:25:57Z 11 Beautiful Truths Harper Lee Taught Us About The World | HuffPost

11 Beautiful Truths Harper Lee Taught Us About The World

"Loves the only thing in this world that is unequivocal."
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Harper Lee -- eminent American author of the 1960 novel To Kill a Mockingbird -- has died at the age of 89

Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel focused not just on the Finch family in 1930s Alabama, but the race, gender and class disparities of the time. It has become one of the most celebrated books in the United States, regularly assigned to middle and high school students and enjoyed by people of all ages. 

Last year, Lee published her second book, Go Set a Watchman , 55 years after the release of To Kill a Mockingbird.

Lee was notoriously private , and while she kept public appearances rare, her public letters are just as rich with wisdom as her novels. In celebration of the relentlessly brilliant writer and her contributions to American literature and culture, we've compiled 11 of her many life lessons from her collected writings. 

 

1. On valuing the things we often overlook: 

Until I feared I would lose it, I never loved to read. One does not love breathing.

-- To Kill a Mockingbird

2.  On keeping perspective and staying humble:

As you grow up, always tell the truth, do no harm to others, and don't think you are the most important being on earth. Rich or poor, you then can look anyone in the eye and say, "I'm probably no better than you, but I'm certainly your equal."

-- Harper Lee in a 2006 letter to a young fan 

3. On lessons that continue to go unlearned: 

As sure as time, history is repeating itself, and as sure as man is man, history is the last place he’ll look for his lessons.

-- Go Set a Watchman

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Chip Somodevilla via Getty Images

4. On resilience: 

Things are always better in the morning.

-- To Kill a Mockingbird

5. On love and loving fully:

Love’s the only thing in this world that is unequivocal. There are different kinds of love, certainly, but it’s a you-do or you-don’t proposition with them all.

-- Go Set a Watchman

6. On judgement:

A man can condemn his enemies, but it’s wiser to know them.

-- Go Set a Watchman

7. On what it really means to be courageous: 

Courage is not a man with a gun in his hand. It's knowing you're licked before you begin but you begin anyway and you see it through no matter what. You rarely win, but sometimes you do.

-- To Kill a Mockingbird

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Hulton Archive via Getty Images

8. On the importance of living in the present:

Remember this also: it’s always easy to look back and see what we were, yesterday, ten years ago. It is hard to see what we are. If you can master that trick, you’ll get along.

-- Go Set a Watchman

9. On (not) caring about what other people think: 

Before I can live with other folks I've got to live with myself. The one thing that doesn't abide by majority rule is a person's conscience.

-- To Kill a Mockingbird

10. On shifting perspective: 

If you did not want much, there was plenty.

-- Go Set a Watchman

11. On empathy: 

You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view.

-- To Kill a Mockingbird

Thank you, Harper Lee, and rest in peace. 

Also on HuffPost:

 

Banned Books
Sons and Lovers(01 of28)
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According to Banned Books: Challenging our Freedom to Read: "In 1961 an Oklahoma City group called Mothers United for Decency hired a trailer, dubbed it "smutmobile," and displayed books deemed objectionable, including Lawrence's novel." (credit:Penguin Books)
Naked Lunch(02 of28)
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Found to be obscene in Boston, MA Superior Court 1965-1966. (credit:Amazon)
The Naked and the Dead(03 of28)
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Banned in Canada (1949) and Australia (1949). (credit:Amazon)
Tropic of Cancer(04 of28)
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First banned from U.S. Customs in 1934 and Supreme Court found the novel not obscene thirty years later. The novel was also banned in Turkey in 1986. (credit:Amazon)
An American Tragedy(05 of28)
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This classic was banned in Boston, MA (1927) and burned by the Nazis in Germany (1933) because it "deals with low love affairs." (credit:Amazon)
Women In Love(06 of28)
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Two years after publication, the book was seized by John Summers of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice and declared obscene (1922). (credit:Amazon)
The Great Gatsby(07 of28)
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Challenged at the Baptist College in Charleston, SC (1987) because of "language and sexual references in the book." (credit:Penguin Books)
The Jungle(08 of28)
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Banned in multiple countries including Yugoslavia (1929), East Germany (1956) & South Korea (1985) and burned in Nazi bonfires because of Sinclairs socialist views in 1933. (credit:Amazon)
Ulysses(09 of28)
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Burned in the U.S. (1918), Ireland (1922), Canada (1922), England (1923) and banned in England (1929). (credit:Penguin Books)
In Cold Blood(10 of28)
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According to Banned Books: The Right to Read: "Banned, but later reinstated after community protests at the Windsor Forest High School in Savannah, GA (2000). The controversy began in early 1999 when a parent complained about sex, violence, and profanity in the book that was part of an Advanced Placement English Class." (credit:Amazon)
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian(11 of28)
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Coming in at #1 on the Top Challenged Books of 2014, for reasons including "anti-family, cultural insensitivity, drugs/alcohol/smoking, gambling, offensive language, sex education, sexually explicit, unsuited for age group, violence. Additional reasons: "depictions of bullying" (credit:Amazon)
Persepolis(12 of28)
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#2 on the Top 10 Most Challenged Books of 2014 for reasons including "gambling, offensive language, political viewpoint." Additional reasons: 'politically, racially, and socially offensive,' 'graphic depictions' (credit:Amazon)
The Sun Also Rises(13 of28)
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Banned in Boston, MA (1930), Ireland (1953), Riverside, CA (1960), San Jose, CA (1960). Burned in Nazi bonfires in Germany (1933). (credit:Amazon)
The Call of the Wild(14 of28)
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Banned in Italy (1929), Yugoslavia (1929), and burned in Nazi bonfires (1933). (credit:Penguin Book)
All The King's Men(15 of28)
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Challenged at the Dallas, TX Independent School District high school libraries (1974). (credit:Amazon)
The Lord of the Rings(16 of28)
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In 2001, copies of The Lord of the Rings books and other Tolkien's novels were burned in Alamagordo, NM outside Christ Community Church being seen as "satanic". (credit:Amazon)
And Tango Makes Three(17 of28)
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#3 on the Top 10 Challenged Books of 2014, on reasons including the book being "Anti-family, homosexuality, political viewpoint, religious viewpoint, unsuited for age group." Additional reasons: promotes the homosexual agenda" (credit:Amazon)
Lord of the Flies(18 of28)
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First challenged in Dallas, TX Independent School District high school libraries in 1974. In 1981, the book was Challenged at the Owen, NC High School because the book is "demoralizing inasmuch as it implies that man is little more than an animal." In 1992, challenged because of profanity, lurid passages about sex, and statements defamatory to minorities, God, women and the disabled. The most recent challenge was in 2000 in Bloomfield, NY. (credit:Amazon)
1984(19 of28)
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Challenged in the Jackson County, FL (1981) because Orwell's novel is "pro-communist and contained explicit sexual matter." (credit:Amazon)
Catch-22(20 of28)
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Banned in Strongsville, OH (1972) for 4 years and challenged at the Dallas, TX & in Snoqualmie, WA (1979) because of its several references to women as "whores." (credit:Amazon)
Their Eyes Were Watching God(21 of28)
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Challenged novel's language and sexual explicitness, but retained on the Stonewall Jackson High School's academically advanced reading list in Brentsville, VA (1997). (credit:Amazon)
Invisible Man(22 of28)
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Text excerpts were banned in Butler, PA (1975). Removed from the high school English reading list in St. Francis, WI (1975). Two parents raised concerns about profanity and images of violence and sexuality in the book, but was retained in the Yakima, WA schools (1994) after a five-month dispute. (credit:Amazon)
Go Tell It on the Mountain(23 of28)
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Challenged as required reading in the Hudson Falls, NY schools (1994) because "the book has recurring themes of rape, masturbation, violence, and degrading treatment of women." Challenged as a ninth-grade summer reading option in Prince William County, VA (1988) because the book is "rife with profanity and explicit sex." (credit:Amazon)
Beloved(24 of28)
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Challenged in St. Augustine, FL in 1995 for the book being too violent. Other reasons for challenges to the book have been concerns over language & sexual material. The most recent case with the book was in 2007, when two parents asked that the book would be pulled from the AP English class in a Louisville, KY school because of inappropriate topics and the principal ordered the teachers to start over with The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne. (credit:Amazon)
Lolita(25 of28)
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Vladmir Nabokovs classic has been banned in the past in several countries in the 1950s, including France, England, Argentina, New Zealand and South Africa. The novel was also challenged in a Public Library in Florida in 2006 after claiming that the pedophilla and incest was unsuitable for minors. (credit:Amazon)
The Bluest Eye(26 of28)
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Placed at #4 on the most recent list of Top Challenged Books for reasons including that the book was "sexually explicit", "unsuited for age group" & that it contains controversial issues (credit:Amazon)
A Farewell to Arms(27 of28)
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Banned in Boston, MA and in Italy on the account of its painfully accurate account of the Italian retreat from Caporetto, Italy in 1929. It was also burned by the Nazis in 1933, banned in Ireland in 1939, and challenged in the Vernon-Verona-Sherill, NY School District (1980) as a "sex novel." (credit:Amazon)
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest(28 of28)
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In 1974, five residents of Strongsville, OH, sued the board of education to remove the novel. Labeling it "pornographic," they charged the novel "glorifies criminal activity, has a tendency to corrupt juveniles and contains descriptions of bestiality, bizarre violence, and torture, dismemberment, death, and human elimination." The book was also removed from public school libraries in New York and Oklahoma and challenged as part of curriculums of classes in Idaho, Washington & Massachusetts. The most recent challenge was in California in 2000, after complaints by parents stated that teachers "can choose the best books, but they keep choosing this garbage over and over again." (credit:Penguin Books)

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